Bella, left, was burned in the Camp Fire. Jeff Evans, seen Wednesday, took her and nine other dogs into his home and has been caring for them for the last week in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

A goat and a pig eat cat food left for them by Butte County Probation Officer Deputy Lucas Russell in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow on Wednesday. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Cal Fire-Butte County Capt. John Gaddie, left, chats with Jeff Evans on Wednesday in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow. Gaddie dropped off a few gallons of gas for Evans’ generator. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Deer look for food Wednesday among the ruins of a house in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Deer graze on a lawn in Concow in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow on Wednesday. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Fred Hugg says Wednesday that he planted many of the trees on his Concow property himself. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Gratitude is evident on Jeff Evans’ face after Fred Hugg, right, brought him fresh vegetables Wednesday in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow. The two neighbors helped each other fight back the flames from their homes, and earlier Wednesday, Evans helped Hugg plug a water leak in the Hugg kitchen. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Fred and Sally Hugg’s horses are alive and well Wednesday in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Fred Hugg stands on his back porch Wednesday and points to the line that the Camp Fire burned in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

“She’s a really good dog,” Jeff Evans says of Bella in the aftermath of the Camp Fire in Concow on Wednesday. Evans is housing 10 dogs plus his two of his own in his home after their owners were forced to leave them behind. Evans and neighbors were able to fight off the blaze and save their homes, but after a week, they’re beginning to worry about supplies running low. (Dan Reidel — Enterprise-Record)

Eugene Graham sits in the Walmart evacuee camp on Thursday, thinking about his home that burned down in Butte Creek Canyon. (Carin Dorghalli — Enterprise-Record)

Georgia and Roberts Thibault, of Magalia, look for new clothes at the donation hub in the Chico Walmart parking lot. They do not know if their home burned down. (Carin Dorghalli — Enterprise-Record)

Luigi Balsamo, an organizer for the donation hub in the Walmart parking lot, shares news he just received on Thursday that the operation outside the Chico Walmart must shut down on Sunday. (Carin Dorghalli — Enterprise-Record)

Ron Irick, of Magalia, is unsure if his house survived the Camp Fire as he seeks refuge in the Chico Walmart parking lot. (Carin Dorghalli — Enterprise-Record)

Bryant Santos, age 4, searches for new toys at the donation hub in the Walmart parking lot in Chico. His Paradise home burned down in the Camp Fire. (Carin Dorghalli — Enterprise-Record)

One week after the Camp Fire started, the White House announced that President Donald Trump will visit California fire victims on Saturday. The president will be landing at Beale Air Force Base near Marysville.

Plans are still being made, the White House also said.

Firefighters continued to gain control of the blaze and better quantify the staggering toll, as the number of deaths and structures burned climbs every day.

As of Thursday night, 63 people had died and 631 people were unaccounted for, Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said. Seven additional remains were located. Three were found in Magalia, three in Paradise and one in Concow. Fifty-three of the victims have been tentatively identified, but DNA confirmation on the burned bodies was being sought.

The number of victims is updated each night after difficult days of searching in Paradise and surrounding communities, with workers and dogs trained to detect human remains.

Honea said the large increase in people reported missing Thursday was the result of his staff going back and updating records generated during the “most intense” portion of the fire.

Cal Fire investigators also identified a possible second origin of the fire in the Concow area, officials announced at a Thursday night briefing.

No other information about what caused the fire was released.

Chris Alcantar of Concow plays with his dog in the evacuee camp near Walmart in Chico Thursday. (Carin Dorghalli — Enterprise-Record)

The fire was reported at 141,000 acres with 40 percent containment. Cal Fire expects full containment in two weeks. There’s an enormous perimeter partially surrounding the fire. The fire was expanding the perimeter on its eastern side, including near one of the suspected ignition points near Camp Creek Road off Highway 70 in Pulga.

With 9,700 homes and 290 commercial buildings destroyed, the Camp Fire is the deadliest and most destructive in terms of structures burned in state history, by far.

The California Highway Patrol said it has recovered 165 vehicles in the fire.

Widespread evacuation orders were still in effect for more than 50,000 people in Paradise, Magalia, Butte Creek Canyon, Butte Valley, Concow and elsewhere.

Highway 32 to Highway 36 has reopened.

Evacuation orders have been reduced to warnings in the north Little Chico Creek area. The area north of Ten Mile House Road is open to Forest Ranch Road. Doe Mill Road south at Village Drive is closed. Santos Ranch Road, Wilder Drive and Autumn Lane will remain closed.

The evacuation order in the Humbug area has been lifted. Doe Mill Road is open east to Powellton Road.

In Forest Ranch, the evacuation warning has been lifted. Forest Ranch Road north to Highway 36 is open.

Evacuation centers are full in Oroville, Orland and at Neighborhood Church in Chico. Centers still accepting evacuees are at Bidwell Junior High School in Chico, Butte County Fairgrounds in Gridley, Yuba-Sutter Fairground in Yuba City and Plumas County Fairgrounds in Quincy.

Officials said they don’t expect the stagnant smokey air to go away, but improved air could be possible by Sunday.

Cal Fire says 5,473 people are fighting the fire. Federal Emergency Management Agency officials arrived in Butte County on Wednesday to start the process of helping evacuees who have lost homes.

A disaster recovery center will open Friday in the former Sears store in the Chico Mall to connect evacuees with the resources for rebuidling.